This is the Rainbow Writing Archive Page

  • No categories

Mama Lisa Facebook Badge
Mama Lisa MySpace Badge
Mama Lisa Twitter Badge
  • My Tweets

  • Blog: We Now Have 100 Languages on Mama Lisa’s World! - http://tinyurl.com/yfnm6re Visit
  • Blog: Can Anyone Help with a Czech or Slovak Kids Song? - http://tinyurl.com/ygeku5m Visit
  • Blog: Does Anyone Know a Song with the Line, “The Ship Sailed for the White Cliffs of Dover”? - http://tinyurl.com/yzb8vhm Visit
  • Blog: Can Anyone Help with a Korean Kids Song? - http://tinyurl.com/yjyklqk Visit
  • Check out Frere Jacques - Brother John a cool recording of the Song in French and English all... http://bit.ly/3O3USK Visit
  • Archive for the 'Rainbow Writing' Category

    Contents

    Rainbow Writing, The Letter “A” and the Excitement Mark!

    Posts

    Rainbow Writing, The Letter “A” and the Excitement Mark!

    Friday, October 13th, 2006

    It’s exciting to watch my 5 year old daughter pick up early reading and writing skills in Kindergarten.

    Right now they’re focusing on the letter “A”. How you write it. What it sounds like. What words begin with “A”.

    One of the interesting writing exercises they do is called Rainbow Writing. To do Rainbow Writing, the child will trace over a letter that the teacher wrote in marker beforehand, or that’s on a ditto. The kid will trace over the letter 5 different times, using 5 different colored crayons. It gives the letter a colorful rainbow effect, thus making the repetition less tedious.

    My daughter’s homework this week was to do Rainbow writing over a capital and lowercase letter A that the teacher wrote in a notebook for her. (Below is my daughter’s homework from last night – I enhanced the colors on the computer so you could see what I mean.)

    Rainbow Writing

    The other homework my daughter had this week was called the Letter Aa Mystery Bag. She had to find something that begins with the letter A. Then she had to put it in a brown paper bag labeled with an A. Then she had to come up with 3 clues to help the class guess what was in the bag. I wrote the 3 clues down for her and she put the list of clues in the bag. Today the class will figure out together what’s in the bag. (She put a toy ant in her bag. Yuck!)

    Mystery Aa Bag

    I thought that was a smart game to make learning fun.

    Lastly, my daughter told me yesterday about how she learned about the exciting mark and with her hand in the air she drew an exclamation point! I thought that was a very clever way to explain an exclamation point to a young kid, calling it an exciting or excitement mark!

    I’m excited to see what she learns next!

    Share on Facebook and other services:
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • MySpace
    • Digg
    • del.icio.us
    • Print this article!
    • E-mail this story to a friend!

    ________

    Copyright ©2009 by Lisa Yannucci. All rights reserved.
    Advertisements